You are here: American University College of Arts & Sciences American University Museum 2025 Jan Svoboda & Jaroslav Beneš: Lenticular Poetry
Jan Svoboda & Jaroslav Beneš: Lenticular Poetry
September 6 – December 7, 2025
Jan Svoboda and Jaroslav Benes, photographers
Pavel Vančát, curator
Jan Svoboda, Against the Light (Literally), 1964. Photograph on baryta paper. Courtesy of SVIT Gallery, Prague.
Overview
Initiated by the Embassy of the Czech Republic, this exhibition brings together two outstanding figures in European photography for the first time in the United States —legendary photographer Jan Svoboda (1934–1990) and his artistic disciple Jaroslav Beneš (b. 1946).
Jan Svoboda is widely recognized as one of the most original photographers of the 1960s, a pioneer of Conceptual photography whose practice blended Romantic symbolism, poetic restraint, and a radical questioning of photographic form. His hauntingly minimalist compositions helped redefine the relationship between photography and fine art.
Jaroslav Beneš builds on Svoboda’s legacy. He captures simplified, illusory architectural forms using a large-format analog camera, crafting images that strip scenes to their poetic essentials that let light, shadow, and silence do the talking.
Lenticular Poetry invites viewers into a quiet, compelling dialogue between these two generations of artists. Svoboda and Beneš’s images remind us of the medium’s power to dream, reflect, and endure—even in a digital world.
Jaroslav Beneš, Untitled, 1980. Contact prints on hardboard. Courtesy of the artist.